Chevy rolls at first day of IndyCar test

Robert Laberge/Getty ImagesScott Dixon uncorked the fastest lap of the first day of Verizon IndyCar Series testing at Barber Motorsports Park on the final lap of the day.

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -- Chevrolet decisively held the upper hand on Day 1 of the first open test of the 2015 Verizon IndyCar Series.

With every Dallara chassis sporting new bodywork designed by engine manufacturers Chevrolet and Honda, Chevy drivers swept the first seven places in the morning session and ran 1-2-3-4-5 in the afternoon.

Team Penske dominated the speed charts for 99.9 percent of the day, only for Target Chip Ganassi Racing's Scott Dixon to steal the honor with the last lap of the afternoon session.

The time was about half a second quicker than the 2014 Barber pole lap, but 0.7 second off Dixon's track record of 1:06.775 set in 2013.

"The car has been pretty decent all day, and really good on used tires," said the three-time IndyCar Series champion. "We're still struggling with balance issues -- weight distribution and things like that, just trying to feel out some of the different changes with the aero kit. The loads are changing significantly with the corner speeds. There's a significant change in drivability, or how you attack the car with the extra downforce you do have.

"All in all a decent day for us," he concluded. "We've still got plenty to test tomorrow and see if we can find some extra things for when we come back here for the race."

Pagenaud was fastest in the morning session, when track conditions were best. He and Power traded the day's fast lap several times in the closing minutes before Dixon leapfrogged them both with his final lap.

[+] Enlarge Neilson Barnard/Getty ImagesFinding speed in the new aero packages being used for the IndyCar Series in 2015 is so far proving easier for Chevrolet than it is for Honda.

"Barber is a beautiful track for an aero kit of this level because it's flowing with high speed corners," he added. "You're carrying a lot of downforce so the car feels hooked up to the track."

Power said he could feel the benefit of the extra downforce produced by Chevrolet's new aero kit, featuring revised front and rear wings, sidepods and rear-wheel fairings.

"Some of these corners around here, like coming on to the straight, it feels like you're on reds [softer alternate compound Firetone tires] and if it was cooler conditions you'd almost be wide open," Power said. "Same with [Turn] 1. You just have a quick lift, not a full lift, and go through.

"There's a lot of grip to be had, we just gotta get the car to work," he added. "With that came a lot more weight, so that's the thing. We need to get the car back to the original weight. It's difficult to find the sweet spot and it's different from track to track. Compared to our test at NOLA [Motorsports Park in New Orleans], we found something we weren't expecting here."

Visually, the Chevrolet aero kit is markedly different in philosophy and execution than Honda's solution. It's early, but the difference is also apparent so far on the stopwatch.

The Honda kit appears to be more complex, with nearly 200 new components compared to the 123 pieces in the Chevrolet kit.

"It's almost like you're starting with a new car," Hunter-Reay said. "You had to do things a certain way to make the DW12 turn and work with the old kit. Now the aero kit puts load on the car in a different way and it's turning the car its own way.

"So it's a work in progress, really," he added. "It's been tough, really tough, and the Chevys definitely seem to have the upper hand.

"You just feel like every run is critical because you're one run closer to the beginning of the season. Once the season starts you can't test anymore. That's different from the past, and we have a lot of bits to work out."

ABOUT THIS BLOG

John Oreovicz

John Oreovicz lives in the shadows of Turn 1 of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

His interest in racing was sparked by the battle between Niki Lauda and James Hunt for the 1976 Formula One World Championship, and he can remember watching the 1977 Long Beach Grand Prix and the 1979 Daytona 500 on the family RCA XL-100 television as if they happened yesterday.

These days, you're likely to find him at Pomona covering drag racing or Phoenix reporting on stock cars in addition to his usual role as one of the IndyCar Series' pressroom veterans.

With more than a decade writing for ESPN.com, his work has been published in more than a dozen countries around the world, and he co-authored "A Winning Adventure," a chronicle of Honda's successful CART Indy car engine program.